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OUR VISION

A club that is enterprising, caring and productive. Developing fellowship and implementing activities rich in choice, for the benefit of our community.

Meeting 508 - 17 November 2009
 


President Philip's Weekly Message

It was great to hear District 9800’s Foundation Director Elect, Past District Governor John Davis talk to us about the new Foundation Vision program last Tuesday.  I can’t emphasise enough how important it is to support Foundation.  A number of us have also joined the Every Rotarian Every Year (EREY) program (formerly called the Centurian program) after hearing our Foundation Director, Steven Aquilina talk about this last Tuesday.  If you are considering it, I urge you to talk further with Steven. 

I also remind you of the Thanks Giving Day picnic on Sunday 29th November.  This is a great fellowship event in our Club’s calendar and I am looking forward to having a really fun day with everyone. 

If you are thinking of a Christmas stocking present for family or friends, do consider the Rotary Club of St Kilda’s second edition of Relish. At $15, it is a great buy.

This week we are helping the KIDS Foundation draw up their strategic plan to look at the way forward for the next five years.  I need a volunteer to scribe next Tuesday afternoon from 4 pm.  If you are able to do this, please let me know and I will provide you with venue and other details.

This week you will hear an update from our Directors and Project Champions on the various activities in which our Club is involved.  Don’t forget to bring the names and contact details for your Friends of Rotary for our Membership Director Troy Gay to compile.  I would like to send them a newsletter next week that will take our Club’s Friends of Rotary message out. 

Enjoy your week in Rotary and see you on Tuesday!

Philip Archer
Club President 2009-2010


Last Week's Meeting

Meeting 507 Scribe Notes

November is Rotary Foundation month and Steven A. invited a special Foundation guest who was going to cover an even more interesting topic … once we allowed him to take the stand J but we had a few things to celebrate and discuss before it came to that.

First of all the impressive achievements of this year's YAA company, BRIGHT IDEYA, sponsored by the Rotary Clubs of Melbourne and Southbank. Mentor and Past President Gordon had the pleasure to announce that the team won 4 distinguished YAA awards: "Company of the Year",  "Environmental Sustainability Award", "Outstanding Product or Service Award" and the "Marketing Initiative Award".  (Pictures and more details about the Awards ceremony can be found on the YAA website http://www.yaa.org.au/page/victoria-/

Second big topic was the 100 Relish books Christmas stocking challenge.  Even though Barbara had already announced to buy "lots", we will still need more members to support this initiative of the Rotary Club of St. Kilda.  Please let PP Gordon or President Philip know how many books you want to order.  In the spirit of the Relish project's theme: "Great food for a good cause", think of all the family members, friends, business partners, colleagues whom you would like to encourage to invite you for a delicious dinner.  Ask President Philip: he has cooked some already (recipes, not friends!!).  Find more about the Relish project on this website: http://www.relishrecipes.com.au

Past President Rhys updated us on the -Yarra Glen Community Fire Relief – Activities.

Steven McI. reported on the current state of the Service Excellence Awards with opportunities for members both to bring forward their excellent ideas to enhance the project and/or contribute by directly participating in making this event a success. 

Sergeant Chris collected a lot of money and charged us for all sorts of "misbehaviour": for going on holiday (re-entry fees), buying apartments (relocation fees), attending free mason dinners (food consumption fees), hiding important personal details (Southbank membership profile non compliance fees) and so on.  All valid "punishments" but … fining Catherine for "Turtle relocation in Broome"! That was too fussy, don’t you think?  We should reimburse her by donating this week’s Sergeant Fines to Conservation Volunteers Australia. http://www.conservationvolunteers.com.au [Ed: Bettina has generously decided to make that donation for us!  Well done, Bettina!]

Some members suggested organising a Rotary Fellowship Turtle rescue excursion for 2010. (Please register your interest with the president elect by June 2010)

Ok, so far so good with Club internals … finally Chair Steven A. announced our guest speaker: Past District Governor and District Foundation Chair elect John Davis.

You may remember that D9800 is one of the 100 Districts worldwide that has been chosen to participate in the new Rotary Foundation pilot  "Future Vision"?
PDG John gave an overview of Future Vision and explained details of the new grant structure.

The Rotary Foundation's Future Vision is a three-year trial and test of the new grant structure of the Foundation.  Pilot districts will have a unique opportunity to help refine the new grant structure by providing input and will receive specialized Foundation support and service during Future Vision's operational phase.  Pilot districts are allocated 50 percent of the Foundation's funding for a particular year as the District Designated Fund (DDF).  DDF is made available to the district for grants or the funding of other Foundation projects.  The other 50 percent are accessible by clubs within pilot districts as global grants, which are provided by the Foundation to match funds for club projects that fit into the 6 categories outlined by the Foundation.

The overarching target of these changes is to encourage Clubs to partner up with each other and business sponsors to run bigger projects with more positive impact.  The partnership with the Bill Gates Foundation supporting the Polio Plus initiative has demonstrated opportunities to raise enormous funds and raise RI’s public profile significantly.

The new grant structure will come in effect with the Rotary year 2010/2011 and we have to indicate by February, if we would like to nominate a Southbank initiative to participate in the new Grant Scheme.  We will investigate these opportunities for the East Timor projects and other potential international projects.  More information on Future Vision can be found on the RI website.  Foundation Chair, Treasurer and President 2010/2011:  be prepared for lots of changes, challenges and fun with the pilot ...

Last but not least; if you would like to support the Rotary Foundation, here are two options:

Donate a regular amount and participate in the "Every Rotarian Every Year program"! Ask Southbank Foundation Chair Steven A. for more details.

Enjoy Breakfast with friends and join President Philip and other members at the annual Paul Harris Breakfast hosted by the Rotary Club of Central-Melbourne Sunrise. (Wednesday, 25th November at the RACV Club, 7:15 am for 7:30 start).

Next Week Director for Membership Troy will explain RC Southbank’s Friends of Rotary Initiative.


Foundation Chair Steven Aquilina's Message

Worldwide, Rotary Foundation Matching Grants are saving and changing lives. Since the first Matching Grant was awarded in 1965, more than US$335 million has been distributed through more than 30,000 grants.

This is a tremendous achievement for Rotarians, who have made these grants possible through their generous donations to the Annual Programs Fund, and dedicated their time and talent to help carry out projects that put Service Above Self.

By giving A$150 a year -- less than A$3 a week -- to the Annual Programs Fund through the Every Rotarian, Every Year (EREY) initiative, Rotarians become part of the Foundation's mission to advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through the improvement of health, the support of education, and the alleviation of poverty.

Here are just a few of the projects made possible through Matching Grants.

Repairing cleft palates

Australian, Dutch, and Indonesian Rotarians have helped repair cleft lips and palates for more than 2,000 children. One of the most common birth defects, clefts can interfere with eating, speaking, and breathing.

Thalca Hamid, an orthodontist from the Rotary Club of Surabaya Central, Surabaya, Indonesia, and two other club members began the project in 2001, arranging patient transportation, educating parents about postoperative care, and providing children with books and toys. Rotarians also recruited local villagers to talk to rural families about the benefits of the surgery. 

"The children and their families have unbelievable pressure and stress because many feel that such defects are a curse," Hamid says. "Previously, few in our community realized how complicated this defect is." Read more.

New hope and self-esteem

The Bitone Center for Disadvantaged Children , located in Kampala, Uganda, is home to two dozen children ages 8-18. Many are orphans; others have lost their homes or been estranged from their families by disease, war, or economic hardship. The Rotary clubs of Kampala-East and Traverse Bay Sunrise, Michigan, USA, are providing support with help from a Rotary Foundation Matching Grant.

By connecting children to traditional Ugandan dance, music, and theatre, as well as providing shelter, food, and education, the centre strives to give them new hope and self-esteem.

Read more, and see some of the children perform a traditional Ugandan dance.

Without water, there is no life

In many parts of the world, people lack access to clean water, leading to disease and death. More than 3.5 million people die from water-related diseases each year, and more than 40 percent of those deaths are due to diarrhoea, which UNICEF lists as the second-leading childhood killer. Polio  also spreads through contaminated water.

Rotary club members have helped install 19,000 bio-sand filters, which make water safe to drink, through the Rotarian-led Children's Safe Water Alliance in the Dominican Republic. They've reached an estimated 100,000 people in 300 communities.

For seven years, more than 200 clubs in 18 districts in Canada, the Dominican Republic, the United States, and other Caribbean countries have supported the effort, as has the Foundation, with 30 Matching Grants.

We believe every Rotarian has a story about EREY. Why do you give through Every Rotarian, Every Year? Send your story to my.erey.story@rotary.org, and it might be chosen to appear in the next EREY ad in The Rotarian.

Your contributions to Every Rotarian, Every Year help make projects such as these possible.

(Source: "Investing less than US$2 a week through the Foundation changes lives" by Antoinette Tuscano, Rotary International News -- 10 November 2009:
http://www.rotary.org/en/MediaAndNews/News/Pages/091110_news_mgroundup.aspx)


Rotary Foundation Thought

This week’s Rotary Foundation Thought is about how a Matching Grant can make a difference.

Last year Rotary clubs in Brazil and Mexico and the United states joined together in a matching grant to aid the Lar das Criancas Children’s Home in Tanabi, Brazil. This institution provides free extracurricular activities and much needed daycare for low income families. A matching grant was used to help the Home purchase uniforms for all of the children. Each student also received school supplies, gym shoes, swimsuits and caps. Tanabi Rotarians have seen the student’s interest in learning and participating in activities improve as well as the children’s sense of self worth after the uniforms and equipment arrived. This is just one of the many examples of how the Foundation’s humanitarian grants programs can make positive changes for children.


© Rotary Club of Southbank 2000 to 2009

Last Updated 22/11/2009